The 1884 World's Fair is held in…
December 1884 CE
The 1884 World's Fair is held in New Orleans, Louisiana.
At a time when nearly one third of all cotton produced in the United States is handled in New Orleans and the city is home to the Cotton Exchange, the idea for the fair had been first advanced by the Cotton Planters Association.
The name World Cotton Centennial referrs to the earliest surviving record of export of a shipment of cotton from the United States to England in 1784.
It is also known as the World's Industrial and Cotton Centennial Exposition.
The U.S. Congress had lent one million dollars to the Fair's directors and given thee hundred thousand dollars for the construction of a large US Government & State Exhibits Hall on the site.
However, the planning and construction of the fair has been marked by corruption and scandals, and state treasurer Edward A. Burke had absconded to Honduras with some $1,777,000 dollars of state money, including most of the fair's budget. (Burke will remain an exile till his death nearly four decades later.)
Despite such serious financial difficulties, the Fair succeeds in offering many attractions to visitors.
It covers two hundred and forty-nine acres (one hundred and one hectares), stretching from St. Charles Avenue to the Mississippi River, and is notable in that it can be entered directly by railway, steamboat, or oceangoing ship.
The main building encloses thirty-three acres (thirteen hectares), and is the largest roofed structure constructed up to that time.
It is illuminated with five thousand electric lights (still a novelty at the time, and said to be ten times the number then existing in New Orleans outside of the fairgrounds).
There is also a Horticultural Hall, an observation tower with electric elevators, and working examples of multiple designs of experimental electric streetcars, which are not deemed good enough to replace the Lamm fireless engines that propel the St. Charles Avenue Streetcar in this city.
On December 16, 1884, U.S. president Chester Arthur opens the Fair via telegraph (two weeks behind schedule).